On Mon, Jan 19, 2009 at 08:43:12PM +0100, Asier wrote: > El Lunes 19 Enero 2009, Marc Singer escribió: > > > I'm not positive, but I thought that the Debian released version of > > APEX supported memory detection. > > If I add the commands via apex-env with the apex shipped by debian: > > $ sudo apex-env > bootaddr *= 0x00008000 > cmdline *= console=ttyS0,115200 rtc-x1205.probe=0,0x6f noirqdebug > cmdline-alt *= console=ttyS0,115200 rtc-x1205.probe=0,0x6f noirqdebug > fis-drv *= nor:0x7e0000+4k > kernelsrc *= fis://kernel > kernelsrc-alt *= fis://kernel > ramdiskaddr *= 0x01000000 > ramdisksrc *= fis://ramdisk > ramdisksrc-alt *= fis://ramdisk > startup = sdram-init; memscan -u 0+64m; copy -s $kernelsrc $bootaddr; copy -s > $ramdisksrc $ramdiskaddr; wait 10 Type ^C key to cancel autoboot.; boot > > After reboot the nslu2 gets stucked and I must reflash it.
A console will help a lot. Have you tried plying your solder-capable pal with beer? > > Additionally I've tryed with several apex versions: > > - apex 1.5.14 from http://ipkg.nslu2-linux.org/feeds/kernel/ > - apex 1.5.14 compiled within the nslu2 and repacked with slugimage > - apex 1.5.14 compiled in a qemu-system-arm virtual machine and repacked with > slugimage There are binaries of APEX in ftp://ftp.buici.com:/pub/apex/apex-1.5.14 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [email protected] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [email protected]

